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korman
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A good troll also knows that you don't just say you don't like something, you make it sound like that's the consensus and everyone outside it is wrong.

Marnie has been out Britta-ing Britta for years.

One of my favorites in a while, probably tops for the season personally (Cissy comes close). I'm going to remember that "Drink Responsibly" commercial for a very, very long time on par with Chinpokomon's "Wild Whacky Action Bike" and "Alabama Man."

I'm with a lot of the others, A for me. Reason being that it wasn't necessarily one of the funniest episodes ever - hardly - but I've rarely ever seen South Park willingly tackle such a sensitive topic and do it so surprisingly well. This episode could have gone really awry in one of the worst ways, but it was done

I actually liked that they used a genuine arch from the previous episode, as if somehow 18 seasons in the stuff the that kids pull is finally having ramifications.

I come from New Jersey, which I would figure might be a pretty aesthetic difference from the Long Beach/Maui white suburbanite vibe. But I grew up near a beach town, and in high school and even college there was an almost desperate strive to be as California as possible for a lot of kids.

A few that I didn't see mentioned in the comments:

Part of the feeling, I think, is that basketball's pantheon of ultra-stars are treated unlike any other sport in the U.S. Football as a sport is more popular, but there's no bigger individual star athletes than in basketball. A lot of basketball fans actually feel that LeBron's success is contentious to the success of

Duncan is basically the only superstar I've seen that has little to no narrative. He's basketball through-and-though (full disclosure, I love the dude and it'll be a sad day when he's done playing), doesn't do commercials, never says whacky stuff, doesn't do talk shows. All business. He's the Hank Hill of professional

I have an ongoing theory about it, which has predictably popped up again since the Finals started; The Decision didn't make people turn on him, it just made the people who didn't like him in the first place louder. I've heard plenty of people, mostly in the media, say that it was the ultimate reason that a lot of

Not specifically on Green Day, but I think it's generally very difficult for a relatively mainstream act to make a "protest" or politically-charged song without coming off like they're trying too hard. It just seems so direct and without nuance of any sort.

If In The Aeroplane Over The Sea is a concept album, which I think it is.

The differences came off like a maturity thing. Margaret is the person you really liked in high school/college, but CJ is the one you actually can be with and is a more natural fit.

I guess I may have been wrong, but I thought the final joke indicated that there isn't going to be a third part … that there is no foreseeable ending, just like with Game Of Thrones (hence Martin being the reason the date was pushed back). The joke itself is that Matt and Trey keep the audience wanting a huge payoff,

Is a site I read doing something different? Well I'll tell you I hate it, ignore it, get used to it, forget about it, and accept it. But I won't tell you that. All you'll know is that I hated it.